Ionizing radiation acts on cellular membranes to generate ceramide and initiate apoptosis. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Recent investigations provided evidence that the sphingomyelin signal transduction pathway mediates apoptosis for tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) in several hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic cells. In this pathway, TNF-receptor interaction initiates sphingomyelin hydrolysis to ceramide by a sphingomyelinase. Ceramide acts as a second messenger stimulating a ceramide-activated serine/threonine protein kinase. The present studies show that ionizing radiation, like TNF, induces rapid sphingomyelin hydrolysis to ceramide and apoptosis in bovine aortic endothelial cells. Elevation of ceramide with exogenous ceramide analogues was sufficient for induction of apoptosis. Protein kinase C activation blocked both radiation-induced sphingomyelin hydrolysis and apoptosis, and apoptosis was restored by ceramide analogues added exogenously. Ionizing radiation acted directly on membrane preparations devoid of nuclei, stimulating sphingomyelin hydrolysis enzymatically through a neutral sphingomyelinase. These studies provide the first conclusive evidence that apoptotic signaling can be generated by interaction of ionizing radiation with cellular membranes and suggest an alternative to the hypothesis that direct DNA damage mediates radiation-induced cell kill.

publication date

  • August 1, 1994

Research

keywords

  • Apoptosis
  • Cell Membrane
  • Ceramides
  • Radiation, Ionizing
  • Sphingomyelins

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC2191598

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0028287960

PubMed ID

  • 8046331

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 180

issue

  • 2